A Sinorhizobium meliloti Lipopolysaccharide Mutant Induces Effective Nodules on the Host Plant Medicago sativa (Alfalfa) but Fails to Establish a Symbiosis with Medicago truncatula
Open Access
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- Published by Scientific Societies in Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®
- Vol. 11 (9) , 906-914
- https://doi.org/10.1094/mpmi.1998.11.9.906
Abstract
The specific Sinorhizobium meliloti lipopolysaccharide (LPS) mutant Rm6963 (A. Lagares, G. Caetano Anolles, K. Niehaus, J. Lorenzen, H. D. Ljunggren, A. Puhler, and G. Favelukes, J. Bacteriol. 174:5941-5952, 1992) was shown to be mutated in a region corresponding to a cloned 5-kb SstI DNA fragment that was able to complement the lpsB and lpsC mutants of S. meliloti described by Clover et al. (R. H. Clover, J. Kieber, and E. R. Signer, J. Bacteriol. 171:3961-3967, 1989). Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacryla-mide electrophoresis revealed that the LPS-I and LPS-II fractions of the LPS mutant Rm6963 were shifted to lower molecular weights. While the majority of the Medicago spp. tested established an effective symbiosis with both the S. meliloti wild-type Rm2011 and the LPS mutant Rm6963, the latter induced ineffective nodules on M. truncatula. A light- and electron-microscopic analysis of the ineffective M. truncatula root nodules revealed that the bacteria were released from the infection threads but failed to colonize the plant cells effectively. The plant cytoplasm was filled with numerous vesicles, probably the result of a disturbed bacteroid development. Sections of ineffective M. truncatula root nodules induced by the LPS mutant Rm6963 showed brown, necrotic cells within the central nodule tissue that autofluoresced when viewed under UV light. These observations are best explained by a plant defense response. Evidently, the rhizobial LPS plays a role in plant-microbe signaling during the formation of M. truncatula nodules.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biogenesis of the peribacteriod membrane in root nodulesTrends in Microbiology, 1996
- Biosynthesis of lipopolysaccharide O antigensTrends in Microbiology, 1995
- Surface polysaccharide mutants of Rhizobium sp. (Acacia) strain GRH2: major requirement of lipopolysaccharide for successful invasion of Acacia nodules and host range determinationMicrobiology, 1995
- Host-plant invasion by Rbizobium: the role of cell-surface componentsTrends in Microbiology, 1994
- Cytological Evidence for a Host Defense Response That Reduces Cell and Tissue Invasion in Pea Nodules by Lipopolysaccharide-Defective Mutants ofRhizobium leguminosarumStrain 3841Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1994
- Developmental biology of legume nodulationNew Phytologist, 1992
- EXOPOLYSACCHARIDES IN PLANT-BACTERIAL INTERACTIONSAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1992
- A Lipopolysaccharide Mutant ofBradyrhizobium japonicumthat Uncouples Plant from Bacterial DifferentiationMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1991
- A family of high-copy-number plasmid vectors with single end-label sites for rapid nucleotide sequencingGene, 1988
- Identification and Characterization of Large Plasmids in Rhizobium meliloti using Agarose Gel ElectrophoresisJournal of General Microbiology, 1979